Costly US fine slashes Julius Bär profits

Share this article

Swiss private bank Julius Bär said on Monday that its net profit plummeted in 2015 due to a provision linked to a US probe into the bank's role in helping Americans evade taxes.

The bank said net profit dropped 67 percent to 121.2 million francs ($119 million) last year.

The fall comes after the Zurich-based bank put aside a 547.25-million-dollar provision to cover a fine it faces following the US
criminal investigation.

Authorities around the world have been clamping down on tax evasion in the wake of the global financial crisis.

Chief executive Boris Collardi said in a statement that the bank expected it would "soon be able to complete the court process and announce the final resolution" following the final approval of the settlement.

Julius Bär was among around a dozen Swiss banks placed under criminal investigation by the US Justice Department, including the country's second largest bank Credit Suisse, which was slapped with a $2.8-billion fine.

Without the US provision, Julius Bär said profits would have grown last year by a fifth to just over 700 million francs.